1967 Corvette Sting Ray - Near Perfect

Most Corvette aficionados agree the L71-Powered '67 is the most magnificent Corvette ever built. Milt Robson's '67 Sting Ray convertible has every important option that was available for that special year.

Is there such a thing as The Perfect Corvette? For many long-time Vette lovers, the answer is an emphatic YES, as they point to the '67 Sting Ray as proof. Five years of refinement and continuous production had taken a very good car and made it the symbol not only of sports-car superiority, but also of American automotive engineering, styling, and production in general. Starting with an all-new platform that beat its three closest rivals-the Jaguar E-Type, A.C./Shelby Cobra, and Studebaker Avanti-in terms of build quality, availability, affordability, street drivability, and gotta-have-it ability, Chevrolet improved the Corvette each year by adding new features such as four-wheel disc brakes, a four-speed gearbox made by GM's own Muncie Gear Division, optional air conditioning, the Mark IV big-block engine, and side exhausts.

When those features, in any combination, were added to the '67-edition Sting Ray, they made for an even more desirable version of America's Only True Sports Car. That's thanks in part to the build quality at St. Louis Assembly-after building just over 94,000 Sting Rays from 1963-1966, they were getting good at it, at a time when some domestic car-assembly plants' build quality was getting worse.

3/16

Original & Resto ::: Just 40,000 original miles were on Robson's '67 when it underwent a full-on, frame-off restoration a couple decades back. After that, it graced the cover of more than one Corvette restorations parts catalog.

Milt Robson's '67 Sting Ray convertible has many of the features that became available on the second-generation Corvette during its production history, plus one extremely noticeable feature that arrived for 1967: the optional 435hp, triple-Holley-two-barrel-carbureted RPO L71 427. Built at Chevrolet's Tonawanda (New York) engine plant, the L71 represented the highest-output engine ever offered for sale in a streetable Vette (if you don't count the '66 L72 427, whose factory horsepower rating was dropped from 450 to 425-by picking a lower number on the engine's power curve and changing a sticker on the air cleaner-in a bid to silence car-industry critics). It was one of only two multiple-carbureted engines offered by any General Motors division for 1967, after some upper-level GM-management arm twisting got Oldsmobile and Pontiac to discontinue their triple-two-barrel carburetor options after 1966. The second multi-carb engine option was the L68 400hp offering in the Corvette.

Milt's '67 looks much like it did when it left St. Louis. "It's a neat little old car," Milt says. "It had about 40,000 original miles on it before it was restored. We've got all the original paperwork-the order form, invoice, window sticker, and the original gas tank sticker." He's owned it for over two decades, and during its lifetime, this particular Sting Ray was featured as the cover car on at least one Corvette restoration-parts catalog.

4/16

Handbrake ::: With the all-new C3 in the works, Chevrolet didn't make many big changes to the '67 Vette's interior. A handbrake replaced the underdash pedal and release lever, and the passenger handhold above the glovebox was eliminated.

During its restoration, this midyear didn't need to have any features or options that weren't originally on the car added to it. That's because this one was outfitted right the first time. "If you could go back, that's the way you'd order it," Milt says. That restoration not only included refinishing it in its Rally Red splendor; it also included keeping the L71's original 11.0:1 compression ratio, which isn't compatible with many of today's commonly available pump premium gasoline. "We don't run it on today's gas," Milt notes. "We keep high-octane fuel in 55-gallon barrels."

MORE PHOTOS

VIEW FULL GALLERY

xclose

1967 Corvette Sting Ray - Near Perfect

Original & Resto ::: Just 40,000 original miles were on Robson's '67 when it underwent a full-on, frame-off restoration a couple decades back. After that, it graced the cover of more than one Corvette restorations parts catalog.

Handbrake ::: With the all-new C3 in the works, Chevrolet didn't make many big changes to the '67 Vette's interior. A handbrake replaced the underdash pedal and release lever, and the passenger handhold above the glovebox was eliminated.

One Last Time ::: For a last-year car, the '67 Sting Ray had plenty of style, despite the center-mounted backup light and replacing the optional knock-off aluminum wheels with bolt-ons. The classic Sting Ray nameplate made its last appearance on the 22,940 '67 Corvettes.

Built With Pride ::: The restored RPO L71 427 in this primo '67 wears three two-barrel Holleys under its triangular air cleaner.

If your idea of The Perfect Corvette includes an L71 427 built just the way Tonawanda built it, you've got to have the same Chevy engine orange paint overspray on the intake manifold.

Doorway to Treasure ::: Beneath the fuel-filler door, you'd find the tank sticker-the buildsheet that accompanied the car down the line at St. Louis Assembly. Milt kept his sticker on the tank and replaced the tank with a new one when he restored his '67.

Check out Todd Nelson's 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS! This car has a clean and sleek personality, from the beautiful black-as-night exterior paint to the flawless high quality leather interior. » Read More

Most people look past the small 4.8L engine and go straight for the bigger ones. In this Little LS Slugfest, we compare both stock and modified versions of the 4.8L and 5.3L engines, now you be the judge! » Read More